It would be great to have a half dozen more choices of columns THAT WE COULD NAME with our choice of them having
- customizable drop down menus like Location, Folders, Goals and Context have
- remembered entries like Tags has
- timed entries like Length has
- no pre-fills like Tasks has

This would allow us to slice, dice and sort our To Do's in ways that are unique to us, more like Excel allows us to do now.

I have a couple of suggestions/feature requests of my own. To me these would certainly be worth upgrading to another tier (from Pro to Pro Plus), but (in addition) I would also be willing to put up "bounties" for these.

1. Smart(er) alarms for both iOS and the website. A task with an alarm but no due time makes no sense. Alarms currently have a default option, but there's no way to conditionally set them, e.g. default 1 minute *if the task has a due time*, otherwise no alarm at all. It's a huge pain to manage alarms manually when creating tasks, no matter what the default setting is.

2. Attachments in the iOS app. I would love to snap a photo of something and attach it to a task without ever leaving the Toodledo app. This only makes sense on mobile devices - I don't generally take photos using my computer. :)

Many of the features in the Android App Ultimate To-Do would be great additions to ToodleDo, without them I might have moved on to another program but Saved Views is one I would like to see implemented on the web.

How I sort, filter, & view one folder is completely different than another.
When I am doing my weekly review I need a whole other sort & filter. Completely un-doable on the web without loosing my setup for general use.

-Be able to remove goals, locations, etc from the left pane instead of opening a new one.

Right now, you can add a new folder without going to a new page, but you can't remove an existing one.

-This is going to sound controversial: Merge locations and contexts. In all honesty, they're very slight variations of the same thing. Sometimes I scratch my head saying, "should this be a context or a location?" and sometimes I wonder "Okay, did I add the task I'm looking for to the location or the context?"

Ultimately, I've dropped the use of contexts and just used locations.

-(for phones) Add the ability to tasks to warn you when leaving an area instead of just when you're entering an area. This is useful if you want to leave yourself a reminder not to forget something. For now, I have to use iOS's built-in reminders app for these things.

-Add Multi-edit to all views. Just do it.

"How I sort, filter, & view one folder is completely different than another."

This is actually an excellent point. In fact, I think that "all lists are equal" is a bit of a weakness of Toodledo. Fact is, not all of my lists are equal: My shopping list is not the same as the project list I use at work, and they are not the same as the wish list I keep.

In fact, I'd actually much prefer that certain things (locations and goals especially) be tied to an individual list ("folder" in Toodledo, I guess) rather than to individual items. Toodledo is *very* granular, and as a result adding a single item takes a lot of time, as I have to set a lot of fields to make it work.

In addition, I think "fields used" should be per-folder, and not universal. My shopping list certainly does not need timer, due date, due time, etc. Yet, because another list does require them, I have to make them available everywhere.

The new "outlines" feature is really highlighting this fact. Not all lists need all of the fields.

-Some ability to edit the "Status" menu to better accommodate people who work slightly differently than GTD.

OR, alternatively, make it more active: If something is delegated, it should appear on the other person's list, not mine. If something is postponed, allow me to set a date/time when it should surface again. If something is cancelled, take it off the list.

One thing that I've noticed about business-level task management systems is that the status is not just a passive field - it has meaning, and the system will react differently to different statuses and respond to status changes. It would be nice to see some of that.

A better calendar. What is UP with those teeny dots? The old (old) version had a much better calendar.

A scheduler that allows you to assign a length of time to a task (eg work on Smith memo, 2pm to 3pm) and then generate a work schedule for the day that shows (a) any to dos due that day (but without assigned times) and (b) scheduled tasks or appointments with assigned times. Heaven. I can do this with Outlook, but would be so nice to not switch from TD to outlook.

Sub-subtasks. Really.

Checklists. Checklists for daily chores, shopping, vacation, packing. There are other programs that do this, but it would be so so nice to have all of these under one roof.

Thanks very much for your reply. There is no easy way to recreate the outline for each day or event (I don't see a copy function), so I would have to recreate the checklist. Plus no easy way to see overall results, no way to see overview of the checklist.

Using the Outline for sub-subtasks would create an additional layer of to-dos outside of my current task list. I would have to flip back and forth between the Tasks section and the Outline section. Which defeats the purpose.

I keep coming back to Toodledo, like a bad boyfriend. Wish I could break up with you. The basic functionality is good, it's just the extras aren't there so I have to seek them out from other applications. Would love to not cheat on you, but you make me do it, Toodledo. You make me do it.

There is a button in the top right corner of the outline to copy it so you don't have to recreate the checklist each time. You can also use the button in the blue toolbar to uncheck all items so you can start over.

Better use of subtasks. A smallish project, be it a one time or a repeatable project can reasonably be listed as task and subtasks. But I would need the ability to have each complete d subtask flag the next subtask as status active, whilst the remaining subtasks stayed in status hold to really make this work.

Add in one more layer of subtasks, with the same forward cascade property and I wouldn't really need project management software for my solo projects.

Probably a better link between outlines and tasks would do the same job. Set up an outline, allow some connecting controls, and have the outline generate the next task(s) rather than storing all in the task list.